-
nozzles of
rocket engines.
Waterless coolant is used as an
alternative to
conventional water and
ethylene glycol coolants. With
higher boiling points than...
- ice.
Development in high-performance
aircraft engines required improved coolants with
higher boiling points,
leading to the
adoption of
glycol or water-glycol...
-
conventional glycol-based
coolants (green or yellow),
though some OAT
products may
contain a red or
mauve dye. Some of the
newer OAT
coolants claim to be compatible...
-
tritium in PWR
coolants is
produced by
reactions of boron-10 with neutrons.
Since tritium itself is a
radioactive isotope of hydrogen, the
coolant becomes contaminated...
- A
coolant pump is a type of pump used to
recirculate a
coolant,
generally a liquid, that is used to
transfer heat away from an
engine or
other device that...
-
waterless engine coolants in its
backup generators in part to
reduce labor costs because traditional water and
ethylene glycol-based
coolants typically need...
- "engine
coolant," are
typically glycol-based
fluids that
contain a
mixture of
ethylene glycol, additives, and water.
Common types of
coolants include...
-
refer to
certain forms of
liquid storage, such the "
coolant reservoir" that
captures overflow of
coolant in an automobile's
cooling system.
Dammed reservoirs...
-
variety of
potential biphenyl coolants. In 1956-75,
Aerojet conducted studies on the rate of "burnout" of
polyphenyl coolants, and in the
following two years...
- and Canada). In a PWR,
water is used both as a
neutron moderator and as
coolant fluid for the
reactor core. In the core,
water is
heated by the energy...